‘Ainadamar’ Turns Lorca Into Death-Haunted Opera by David Hwang

Osvaldo Golijov’s poetic 2003 work is being presented in a new production at Detroit Opera that will travel to the Met.

Spain is “a country of death, a country open to death,” the poet Federico García Lorca wrote.

Those words come from his classic lecture on “duende,” the spirit he saw as presiding over Spanish culture — the dark, earthy, imperfect, wild, morbid quality of its greatest art, music and bullfighting. When an ancient woman with barely a wisp of voice left takes the stage of a dimly lit country cabaret, cracks her way through a line of song and still gives you chills, duende is in the room.

And duende should be in the room, too, for “Ainadamar,” Osvaldo Golijov’s death-haunted opera about Lorca, which opened at the newly ambitious Detroit Opera on Saturday evening in a production headed for the Metropolitan Opera in the 2024-25 season.

A poetic meditation that keeps erupting in sensual, riotous flamenco rhythms, the 80-minute piece — which premiered in 2003 and was substantially revised two years later — crosses time with seductively blurry ease in David Henry Hwang’s libretto, translated by Golijov into Spanish.

Read more at the New York Times

ASSASSINS, TROUBLE IN MIND & More Set for Lyric Stage 2023/24 Season by David Hwang

Lyric Stage has announced its 2023/24 season!

YELLOW FACE

By David Henry Hwang
June 2-23, 2024

An Asian-American playwright and activist gets tangled in a complicated and humorous web of lies as he struggles to win back his integrity.

Truth and fiction blur in David Henry Hwang's satiric memoir about DHH, a playwright plunged into a whirlpool of missteps and unintentional hypocrisy after a vocal protest against the casting of Jonathan Pryce as a Eurasian hustler in the Broadway production of Miss Saigon. What he condemns as "yellowface" soon comes back to haunt him when he later misidentifies a Caucasian actor for mixed-race and casts him in his own Broadway-bound comedy. His personal integrity is compromised as he proceeds to conceal his blunder aiding the narrative of this "born-again Asian." Ultimately a forceful argument for representation, this provocative and comical sideways glance at race and assimilation asks "who has the ownership of a culture?"

Read more at Broadway World

Disney's TARZAN to be Presented at Lyric Stage in May by David Hwang

Lyric Stage will present Disney's TARZAN May 18-21, 2023 at the historic Majestic Theatre. Directed by Brandon Mason and adapted from the 1999 Walt Disney Animation Studios film of the same name, TARZAN follows the journey from 'boy to man' of an infant who is raised by gorillas in the jungles of West Africa. As Tarzan develops feelings for a young woman who suddenly appears in his jungle, he discovers that his animal upbringing clashes with his human instincts, causing him to struggle with not only his love for Jane but how to protect his family.

Disney's TARZAN features heart-pumping music & lyrics by rock legend Phil Collins performed by a live orchestra. With a book by Tony Award-winning playwright David Henry Hwang, this family-friendly musical features all of the beloved songs from the 1999 TARZAN movie, including the Academy Award-winning "You'll Be in My Heart," plus an additional nine songs all written by Phil Collins for the Broadway musical. With a title and music recognized all over the world, TARZAN is sure to be a hit with the entire family.

Read more at Broadway World

Josh Gad Teases A Finished Script For Disney’s Live-Action ‘Hunchback of Notre Dame’ Film by David Hwang

Monday evening, award-winning actor Josh Gad took to Instagram to post his approval of a fan-made poster for Disney’s previously announced live-action Hunchback of Notre Dame film.

While Gad hasn’t publicly commented on the project since 2021, the brief caption he wrote alongside the post not only expressed approval of the fan art, but offered a surprisingly major update on the status of the project too.

When the film was first announced to be in development in 2019, it was revealed that Tony-winning M. Butterfly playwright David Henry Hwang had been hired by Disney to write the film. Once again, we just want to clarify that this is the first time since then the script’s completion has been acknowledged.

Regardless of what stage this project is in, we are just happy to see is still alive – even if it is in the form of a promising script at this point.

Read more at The DisInsider

Ainadamar at the Opéra de Montréal: power and efficiency by David Hwang

Pier-Olivier Pinard In Ainadamar, Golijov and his librettist, David Henry Hwang, transcend historical facts (the rise of fascism in Spain and the death of García Lorca) to show through the central figure Lorca's favorite actress, Margarita Xirgu, that art and culture are immortal if they manage to be transmitted.

With Ainadamar, by the Argentinian Osvaldo Golijov, at the Théâtre Maisonneuve, the Opéra de Montréal puts to its credit a powerful and effective performance of one of the eminent lyrical works of the 21st century.

It's no wonder that Ainadamar, opera of 2003, revised in the wake (2005), returns to the front of the stage. The work is as strong as it is symbolic in various ways.

Granada's “Fountain of Tears” (Ainadamar) is at the heart of many intertwined destinies. Culturally, Granada is in history a crossroads of Christian, Jewish and Muslim civilizations. In the 20th century, Federico García Lorca was executed there in 1936 by fascist militiamen. It is then a voice that we want to silence for many reasons, in particular what he writes and represents, as the vociferous militiaman Ramon Ruiz Alonso, perfectly personified by Alfredo Tejada. The violent imprecations of the militiaman are written in a musical style reminiscent of the Arab-Muslim soil of Andalusia.

Read more at The Times Hub

World Theatre Day 2023: Know its history and significance, share these wishes, quotes and messages by David Hwang

"Theatre is a living breathing art form. There's no way you can capture it on film. It's ephemeral. That's part of its power and its magic." - David Henry Hwang

World Theatre Day 2023: Every year on March 27, people celebrate World Theatre Day to highlight the importance of theatre to both individuals and society. Initiated by the International Theatre Institute (ITI) in 1961, the day is now observed in more than 100 nations across the globe.

The ITI is a UNESCO-affiliated organisation that supports global cultural exchange and the growth of theatre arts. The organisation was established in 1948, and its goal is to use theatre to advance peace and develop global understanding.

The purpose of World Theatre Day is to emphasise the value of theatre in both the personal and societal growth of people. Theatre offers a venue for creativity, self-expression, and cross-cultural interaction, and it has the ability to inform, amuse, and inspire audiences.

Read more at Wion News

David Henry Hwang's CHINGLISH to be Presented at San Francisco Playhouse in May by David Hwang

Chinglish will perform May 4 - June 10, 2023

San Francisco Playhouse will present the comedy Chinglish by Tony Award winner and Pulitzer Prize finalist David Henry Hwang (M. Butterfly, Yellow Face, Soft Power). In this fast-paced modern comedy, culture and customs collide as a naïve American sign manufacturer travels to China in search of a lucrative contract. As he discovers the complexities of the venture, he learns that some things aren't so easily translated. Directed by in-demand Bay Area director Jeffrey Lo, Chinglish will perform May 4 - June 10, 2023 (opening night: May 10) at San Francisco Playhouse, 450 Post Street. For tickets ($15-$100) and more information, the public may visit sfplayhouse.org or call the box office at 415-677-9596.

Chinglish premiered at The Goodman Theatre, where it was hailed as "One of the funniest plays in memory" (Chicago Sun-Times) and enjoyed an extended run. It then moved onto New York City, where it was called "Fresh, energetic, and unlike anything else on Broadway" (Associated Press) and "A lethal comedy about business, sex and the failure to communicate that bristles with intelligence" (Bloomberg). In response to changing US relationships with China, the script was updated in 2015.

Read more at Broadway World

ENOUGH! Seeks Short Anti-Gun Violence Plays From Teens by David Hwang

Roundabout Youth Ensemble performing at the ENOUGH 2022 Nationwide Reading at Lincoln Center. (Photo by Sachyn Mital)

Lauren Gunderson, David Henry Hwang, and others will serve as judges for the playwriting contest.

NEW YORK CITY: The teen playwriting contest ENOUGH! Plays to End Gun Violence is now soliciting submissions for their annual contest, which will be judged by a prestigious panel including playwrights Lauren Gunderson, David Henry Hwang, Idris Goodwin, Samuel D. Hunter, Antoinette Nwandu, Octavio Solis, and Lloyd Suh.

“The recent mass shooting deaths of AAPI victims in California proves once again that no community in America is safe from gun violence,” said Hwang, a returning judge, in a statement. “Whatever their motivations, the shooters would have been unable to take so many lives without easy access to guns. That’s why it’s more important than ever to hear from young people across this nation who will speak their minds and say ‘enough.'”

Read more at American Theatre

Daniel Dae Kim Will Star in Audio Adaptation of David Henry Hwang's Yellow Face for Audible by David Hwang

The project will be directed by Leigh Silverman, who helmed the play's 2007 world premiere.

Film and TV star Daniel Dae Kim will lead an audio production of David Henry Hwang's Yellow Face for Audible Studios. Kim will star as Hwang, with Leigh Silverman returning to direct after helming the work's 2007 world premiere productions.

The semi-autobiographical work follows Hwang as he becomes a major voice in the controversy surrounding white actor Jonathan Pryce's casting in Miss Saigon on Broadway. The playwright pens a satirical play in response to the situation, and then unwittingly casts a white actor in the Asian lead role. The work premiered at Mark Taper Forum in a co-production with East West Players in 2007, and played an Off-Broadway run at The Public the same year.

Read more at Playbill


The Wayward Artist Announces Season Six; AVENUE Q, YELLOW FACE, and More by David Hwang

After its first five years of success in bringing "wayward" theatre to Orange County audiences, The Wayward Artist announces its most ambitious season yet. In Season Six, The Wayward Artist will bring nine different shows to its stage, including six main stage shows and three shows from Wayward Voices, the company's unique program designed to amplify, enhance, and empower BIPOC voices in theatre. Look out for a separate announcement about the new season of shows from Wayward Voices soon.

"In our sixth season, we are making bold choices!" said Craig Tyrl, Artistic Director, and Founder of The Wayward Artist. "We are showcasing the Asian American, BIPOC, LGBTQ+, and female experience in our season."


Yellow Face by David Henry Hwang

The lines between truth and fiction blur with hilarious and moving results in Yellow Face, Davide Henry Hwang's unreliable memoir. Asian-American playwright DHH, fresh off his Tony Award win for M. Butterfly, leads a protest against the casting of Jonathan Pryce as the Eurasian pimp in the original Broadway production of Miss Saigon, condemning the practice as "yellowface." His position soon comes back to haunt him when he mistakes a Caucasian actor, Marcus G. Dahlman, for mixed-race, and casts him in the lead Asian role of his own Broadway-bound comedy, Face Value. When DHH discovers the truth of Marcus' ethnicity, he tries to conceal his blunder to protect his reputation as an Asian-American role model, by passing the actor off as a "Siberian Jew." As he clings to his old multicultural rhetoric, this new racist witch hunt forces DHH to confront the complex and ever-changing role that "face" plays in American life today. Directed by Aung Khine Min, Yellow Face performances run from September 22nd to October 1st.

Read more at Broadway World

Joanne Telesford, Qshans Thode & Robin van den Akker Join World Premiere of Re-Imagined AIDA in the Netherlands by David Hwang

The updated and renewed musical will have its world premiere in the AFAS Circustheater in Scheveningen on April 23, 2022

Producer Stage Entertainment Nederland has announced three new names, who will star in the musical AIDA alongside Gaia Aikman, April Darby and Naidjim Severina. Joanne Telesford, Qshans Thode and Robin van den Akker will play the roles of Kandake, Mereb and Zoser respectively. On April 23, 2023, the updated and renewed musical AIDA will have its world premiere in the AFAS Circustheater in Scheveningen.

Joanne Telesford, who is currently starring in the theatrical comedy Girls on Fire , is looking forward to playing the role of Kandake (the warrior queen of Nubia). "It's fantastic to be able to play this role," says Joanne. "In the original production of AIDA, it was Aida's father who played a role in her life. Director Schele Williams did extensive research into the role of women in ancient Egypt and in this new production it is her mother Kandake who is the influential force.' Joanne also starred in other productions such as Disney's The Lion King and Tarzan, Hairspray and Daddy Cool . In 2017, she was nominated for a Musical Award for her portrayal of Winnie Mandela in the show Amandla! Mandela.

The Grammy and Tony Award-winning music in AIDA is some of the most iconic in musical history. The collaboration between Elton John and Tim Rice, who were inspired by the 1871 opera of the same name by the great Italian composer Giuseppe Verdi, led to songs such as: ' Somewhere in the Stars', 'Gone Too Far', 'Blessed Nubia', "Forget him."

Written by David Henry Hwang , AIDA is directed by Schele Williams.

Read more at Broadway World

Celebrate Valentine’s Day With AIDA by David Hwang

Celebrate Valentine’s Day weekend with one of the best love stories of all time: Elton John and Tim Rice’s AIDA. Lyric Stage is proud to celebrate Black History Month with this Tony Award®-winning musical. AIDA runs February 15-19 at The Majestic Theatre in downtown Dallas.

Directed by Sasha Ada Maya, this classic musical tells the tale of an enslaved Nubian princess. She finds her heart entangled with an Egyptian soldier who is engaged to the Pharaoh’s daughter. As their forbidden love blossoms, Aida is forced to choose between her responsibility to her people and the love of her life.

AIDA is based on the beloved Verdi opera of that name. The timeless tale of love, loyalty, and betrayal is considered to be one of the most epic romances of all time. With music by Elton John, Lyrics by Tim Rice, and a book by Linda Woolverton, Robert Falls, and David Henry Hwang, AIDA was originally produced by Walt Disney Theatrical. The musical ran on Broadway for 1,852 performances, winning four Tony awards during its run.

Read more at Focus Daily News

Daniel Dae Kim Signs Deal With Audible by David Hwang

Kim (Photo: Eugene Powers / Shutterstock)

AUDIBLE has signed actor/director/producer DANIEL DAE KIM to a multi-project development and first look deal that will launch with an audio adaptation of DAVID HENRY HWANG's play "YELLOW FACE" produced by KIM's production company 3AD and AUDIBLE STUDIOS.

KIM, known for his stints on "LOST" and "HAWAII FIVE-O," said, “I’ve been a fan of DAVID HENRY HWANG, (director) LEIGH SILVERMAN and AUDIBLE’s for a very long time, so teaming up all together is something I’m truly excited by, especially to work on YELLOW FACE. It has always been a special play, and now to be able to bring it new life in an audio format represents an opportunity that’s both unique and innovative."

Read more at All Access

Audible Inks First-Look Deal With Daniel Dae Kim for Audio Originals (EXCLUSIVE) by David Hwang

Kevin Winter/Getty Images

Premium audio storytelling platform Audible announced a multiproject development and first-look deal with award-winning actor, director and producer Daniel Dae Kim.

The first project under the pact is “Yellow Face,” an audio adaptation of David Henry Hwang’s play of the same name that will be produced by Audible Studios in collaboration with Kim’s 3AD production company. Audible doesn’t have a release date for “Yellow Face” as yet.

“Yellow Face” addresses topics of race at the interaction of media and politics. It begins with the 1990s controversy over color-blind casting for the musical “Miss Saigon” — before spinning into a comic fantasy, in which the character David Henry Hwang (DHH) pens a play in protest, and Hwang unwittingly casts a white actor as the Asian lead.

Read more at Variety

Lloyd Suh’s Plays About the Past Speak Directly to Our Present by David Hwang

Shannon Tyo and Jinn S. Kim in “The Far Country,” at Atlantic Theater Company’s Linda Gross Theater through Jan. 1. Credit...Richard Termine for The New York Times.

The playwright of “The Far Country” is using a contemporary lens to show “the way in which memory becomes hereditary.”

The 47-year-old playwright Lloyd Suh is having a moment, with a handful of plays that reveal how history can exact an emotional toll across culture and time.

His latest, “The Far Country,” opens at Angel Island, the notorious checkpoint off the coast of San Francisco, and explores lives fractured by the Chinese Exclusion Act, a racist policy that severely restricted immigration of Chinese people and limited those in the United States from gaining citizenship.

“There’s certainly a range of activity now and a quantity of work and a variety of work that feels pretty fresh,” said David Henry Hwang, who became the first (and remains the only) Asian American playwright to win a Tony Award for best play, for “M. Butterfly” in 1988.

“There has been an increasing number of AAPI playwrights challenging what has come before,” Hwang added, referring to Asian American Pacific Islanders. “Asian actors have been largely employed by ‘The King and I’ and ‘Miss Saigon,’ which have Orientalist aspects, white supremacist aspects, and with ‘Miss Saigon’ is actually pretty racist.”

Read more at New York Times

‘KPOP’ final-performance talkback addresses Asian and AAPI representation on Broadway by David Hwang

L-R: Kimmy Yam, Helen Park, Hansol Jung, Pun Bandhu, David Henry Hwang and John Yi at "KPOP" final-performance talkback (Photo credit: Courtesy of OMDKC)

On Dec. 11, the original musical “KPOP” played its final Broadway performance. At the time of closing, the musical had played 44 previews and 17 regular performances at the Circle in the Square Theatre. The musical’s swift closure raised questions and an emotional public response about how the show — which featured 21 Korean, Korean-American and Asian/Pacific Islander (API) performers and was made by a largely Korean and Korean-American creative team — could have lasted longer.

In response to the show’s closing notice, “KPOP” cast members rallied outside their theater in Gershwin Alley before the evening performance on Dec. 10. Leaders of the Asian American/Pacific Islander (AAPI) theatrical community took part in a post-show talkback that immediately followed the Dec. 11 closing performance. The talkback united Helen Park, composer of “KPOP”; playwright Hansol Jung, Pun Bandhu, co-founder of the Asian American Performers Action Coalition (AAPAC); and Tony Award-winning playwright David Henry Hwang. Led by journalist Kimmy Yam, the panel sought to answer: Where are we now with regards to AAPI representation on Broadway, and how do we improve?

Read more at Broadway News

What do fast-closing shows say about diverse stories on Broadway? by David Hwang

KPOP on Broadway. Photo: Matthew Murphy and Evan Zimmerman

Two Broadway shows written and performed predominantly by artists of colour, recently announced dramatically fast closures only weeks after opening. Howard Sherman deep dives into their struggles and asks what they tell us a

Stories of bygone Broadway days often include tales of shows that closed on opening night, or, in a few cases, didn’t even make it there. These are all but unheard of in recent years. Advances in marketing and promotion, shrewd pricing and capitalisations that budget for losses in early weeks are meant to ensure that shows can have a few weeks to build up a head of steam rather than throwing in the towel if reviews aren’t sufficiently laudatory.

That’s what makes the recent announcement of the rapid closings of the play Ain’t No Mo’ and the musical KPOP so surprising. While they managed short runs following their previews, the former will have played only 28 regular performances when it closes on December 23, while KPOP, which finished on December 11, eked out 17. Those are uncharacteristically fast departures.

As we get further out of the pandemic shutdown, we will have more data about what is working and what is not, and whether the anecdotal perceptions around works by artists of colour – that they face an even steeper climb than other shows – are borne out across multiple seasons. At a post-performance discussion at KPOP on Sunday, scheduled before its closure was determined, playwright David Henry Hwang spoke of the progress he’s seen for Asian-American artists over the course of his 40-year career, beginning before the term ‘Asian American’ existed and Asian roles were still commonly performed in yellowface. At the same time as recognising progress, he also spoke in revolutionary terms about how to really change what’s possible on Broadway.

“Blow it up,” said Hwang, “to build it better.”

Read more at The Stage

Geekwire chairman launches first all AAPI late-night talk show by David Hwang

Jonathan Ng Sposato

“I always try new things.”

That is how Geekwire chairman and co-founder Jonathan Ng Sposato described his motivation in creating JoySauce Network – a multifaceted media platform focused on Asian Americans – during an interview with AsAmNews.

“It’s almost like a parallel universe, where I feel that by default, portrayals of the Asian diaspora are always very positive and flattering and joyful and hopeful,” Sposato said. 

JoySauce Network boasts several different contents – from podcasts, scripted and non-scripted shows, editorials, stand-up comedy specials, and so much more.

On Dec. 3, JoySauce Network launched the first episode of its late-night talk show, JoySauce Late Night, with video game developer Kiki Wolfkill as the special guest.

“In terms of cast, host, and guests, it’s the first all AAPI late-night talk show,” Sposato said. 

He added that JoySauce Late Night is a space to showcase various AAPI visionaries and leaders.

Iconic playwright David Henry Hwang also graced JoySauce Late Night with his presence. Sposato described Hwang as “everyone’s favorite uncle.”

Read more at AsAmNews

Video: Yale In Hollywood Fest Announces 2022 Awards by David Hwang

President of Yale in Hollywood Kevin Winston presented Yale in Hollywood's inaugural Rising Star Award to social media influencer Kahlil Greene, aka the Gen Z historian, who is an online educator and advocate with 600,000+ and 20 million+ views across his Tiktok, Instagram and LinkedIn platforms.

The esteemed Yale in Hollywood Fest 2022 alumnae jury consisting of Robinne Lee, David Henry Hwang, Sophia Mitri Schloss and Jeff Locker presented the following awards to the YIH Fest 2022 filmmakers:

Best Documentary Feature: No Ordinary Campaign directed by Chris Burke

Best Documentary Short: "American Justice on Trial" directed by Andrew Abrahams and Herb Ferrette, produced by Lise Pearlman.

Read more at Broadway.com

Broadway’s ‘KPOP’ Sets Closing by David Hwang

KPOP, the history-making Broadway musical depicting and celebrating the Korean pop genre phenomenon of the title, will play its final performance this Sunday after a struggle at the box office.

The final performance of the musical, which features a cast of young actors and actual K-pop stars including Luna, BoHyung and others, will close after its performance on Sunday, December 11, at Circle in the Square Theatre.

The show began previews on Oct. 13, and officially opened Nov. 27.

For the final show, producers are offering 200 complimentary tickets to AAPI community members and youth, and plan a post-performance panel discussion with top AAPI theater artists including David Henry Hwang, the first Asian American playwright to win a Tony Award (for the landmark M. Butterfly) and KPOP composer Helen Park.

KPOP, directed by Teddy Bergman, features a book by Jason Kim; music, lyrics, music production and arrangements by Helen Park; music and lyrics by Max Vernon; and choreography by Jennifer Weber.

Read more at Deadline